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As Nesting Season Comes to a Close…

August 13, 2012 By Communications Team

Banded male Indigo Bunting.  Photo by Justin Thompson.
Banded male Indigo Bunting. Photo by Justin Thompson.

Nesting season is over, and fall migration is very near.   We must soon say goodbye to migratory beauties, like the Indigo Bunting.  In fact, I have already noticed that the Gray Catbirds seem to have all but disappeared from my yard.  Their melodious songs and not so melodious cat-like calls are regrettably absent from the sparse late summer chorus of my backyard these days.

John James Audubon Catbird print.
John James Audubon Catbird print.

However, I did glimpse a shy young catbird in the woods privately stuffing his face full of Black Gum berries a few days ago.  The tree  has surprisingly already begun its foliar fruit flagging; its glossy, scarlet purple leaves alert the hungry migrating songbirds to a secret berry feast that might otherwise go undetected and thus wasted.  It’s amazing how all the parts of nature communicate so effectively with one another, as if the trees themselves speak a language we can neither hear nor understand.

Click here to visit the website of Marcia Bonta, prominent naturalist writer, to learn more about the imminent color of Autumn leaves and the migrant birds that depend on them.  Fascinating.

Black Gum berries and fall foliage.  Photo from <http://www.eattheweeds.com>
Black Gum berries and fall foliage. Photo from <http://www.eattheweeds.com>

Shorebird fall migration has been underway for a couple weeks now.  In fact, three new species have been added to our “Species Seen in 2012” list including the Semipalmated Sandpiper, Lesser Yellowlegs and Least Sandpiper.  These  birds, which are only seen in this area during migration, were all sighted at the mudflats at Springton Reservoir, a great place for “neighborhood shorebirding”.  This brings our total bird species seen in the Willistown area to 157!  Keep sending in those sightings so we can hit our goal of 165 bird species by the end of the year!

Flagged redknot from the Delaware Shorebird Project.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Flagged Redknot from the Delaware Shorebird Project. Photo by Blake Goll.

If you are planning on setting out on a shorebird birding adventure, keep in mind that the best flight days are days with WNW winds after a cold front.  As with songbirds, the juvenile shorebirds are not on the move yet.  After all, kids will be kids fooling around and lagging behind the adults.  Perhaps on your shorebird adventure to, say, the Delaware Bay, you might be lucky enough to spot B95, the  most amazing athlete in the world (the Olympic athletes have nothing on this bird!)

B95 is a 20 year old, 4-ounce Red Knot who, thanks to banding, was discovered to still be alive and healthy this spring after traveling a staggering distance equivalent to the moon and halfway back over his lifetime.  Check out this Philadelphia Inquirer article to learn more about the amazing “Moonbird” and the new book about him, by Phillip Hoose, geared towards youth but fascinating for adults too.

Also swiftly coming down the pike are the migratory raptors.  The Hawk Mountain hawk watch begins Wednesday and they have already reported a few migrants trickling in including Bald Eagle, Merlin, American Kestrel, Broad Winged Hawk and Sharp-shinned Hawks.  Keep track of the migration by visiting their Raptor Count page.  If you are planning a visit to Hawk Mountain this fall, be sure to check out their events calender as they have all kinds of great events, lectures and festivals going on, like Bald Eagle Migration Day August 25.

Sharp-shinnned Hawk (Young female) banded at Rushton last fall.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Sharp-shinnned Hawk (Young female) banded at Rushton last fall. Photo by Blake Goll.

Looking Ahead to Rushton Fall Banding

Fall songbird migration banding at Rushton will begin after Labor Day.  The exact date is yet to be determined, so stay tuned!  The banding station will be open to the public on Tuesdays and Thursdays from sunrise until 11am, through the first weeks of November.  Northern Saw-whet Owl banding will begin in October.

Common Yellowthroat being released after banding.  Photo by Adrian Binns.
Common Yellowthroat being released after banding. Photo by Adrian Binns.

Individuals and small groups never need a reservation for songbird banding in the morning.  Large groups should contact Lisa Kiziuk (lkr@wctrust.org) to make a reservation.  School teachers who would like to bring their classes to songbird banding should contact Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org).  These field trips can be catered to the needs of the class, but typically run from 9am –noon and include the three-station grand tour of our beautiful “outdoor classroom.”  The hands-on educational tour includes a study of the small scale-high yield, sustainable CSA farm, a woodland ecology walk, and observation of the science of bird banding.

Westtown 1st grade class at Rushton banding station.
Westtown 1st grade class at Rushton banding station observing Doris McGovern banding a Carolina Wren.

Anyone looking to bring a group to Saw-whet Owl banding this Fall should contact Lisa Kiziuk (lkr@wctrust.org) ASAP, as nights are quickly getting booked!

Rebecca Goll with Saw-whet Owl before release.
Rebecca Goll with Saw-whet Owl before release.

NOTE: To help support our growing number of quality education programs, please understand there may be a nominal fee associated with Rushton field trips and Saw-whet Owl banding.

PA Young Birders

Last month’s PAYB Poetry Workshop was exceptional, thanks to Cathy Staples (award winning poet and Villanova poetry professor) and her lovely assistant and daughter, Natalie Staples.  The young birders explored the community garden for sensory details to use in their poems.

Black Swallowtail Caterpillar on fennel host plant.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Black Swallowtail Caterpillar on fennel host plant. Photo by Blake Goll.
Young Birders sharing poetry (with Natalie and Cathy Staples).
Young Birders sharing poetry (with Natalie and Cathy Staples).

They were so inspired and focused that they did not seem to care much about the sweltering heat and humidity!  With Cathy and Natalie’s patient guidance, the children produced profound poems about the butterflies, birds, vegetables, flowers, and scenery they had observed.  Here are some of their masterpieces (If you click on them, they should open in another window and be easier to read):

One of the parents was even inspired to write a poem about the ferocious storm that cut our meeting short.  Before we were able to illustrate our poems, the sudden vehement wind and ominous rumbling clouds sent the parents and Young Birders frantically fleeing to their cars for safety as unused paint brushes and watercolor paper were sent whirling from the table….

Storm Coming
HUGE, billowing, deep, dark clouds covered the sky as we crossed Haverford Road.
Streetlights shone in the black, as if it were night.
Winds whipped branches and drove dust across our path.
The car hurtled faster, racing to beat the clouds home.
Would we make it?
Thunder rumbled its low throaty growl, seemingly distant, yet threatening so near.
Where was the lightning?   Where was the rain?
A rolling stop, a quick turn,
Accelerate, turn, faster.
Oh no, slow for the speed bump!
Accelerate, brake, another bump!
Here comes the wind raising a wake across the pond.
Wish the walker luck . . . she’ll soon be wet.
The last turn, pedal down, darn last bump.
Screeching into the carport, hop out and run for the door.
We made it!
By Sheryl Johnson
Tree Swallow at Rushton Farm.  Photo by Fred de Long.
Tree Swallow  on blueberry shrub at Rushton Farm. Photo by Fred de Long.

The next PAYB meeting, “Farm, Birds and Bugs,” is this Wednesday August 15 at Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm from 6-7:30pm.  This month’s meeting will feature guest speaker, John Black, a Master Naturalist for Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge in New Jersey.  He is also on the Board of Directors for the Atlantic Audubon Society and describes himself as a long-haired, tree-hugging, dirt worshiping environmentalist!  He will be sharing with us his vast knowledge about the natural world, especially native plants, spiders and insects, with an emphasis on the Monarch Butterfly.   We will discover these insects and birds of Rushton and learn how the sustainability of the farm brings people, animals and plants together in harmony.

Please RSVP to Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org).

Venusta Orchard spider.  Photo by John Black.
Venusta Orchard spider. Photo by John Black.
Male Monarch Butterfly on wildflowers.
Male Monarch Butterfly on Joe Pye Weed.

We would also like to encourage all PA Young Birders to attend the upcoming ABA Mid-Atlantic Young Birder Conference on September 22, 2012 from 9:00 to 4:00 (optional pre-conference birdwalk begins at 8:00) at the Ashland Nature Center, Hockessin, DE.  “Bird walks and hawk watching at the peak of fall migration will feature prominently, as will concurrent indoor learning sessions for new and experienced young birders alike, allowing everyone from elementary school through late teens to find things of interest. There will also be special sessions by and for parents, mentors, and club coordinators.”

For more information about this exciting conference, please visit  the website.

Our Last MAPS Mornings

“Summer MAPS (Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship) banding for this year has come to a close. Our feet have grown accustomed to the rhythm of making a figure eight around the woods for each net check.  We will certainly miss gathering in the heart of the Rushton woods, listening to the solid tree trunks sound again, and walking across the stream to examine Net Seven in the hopes of another Kentucky Warbler,” sighed Natalie Staples.

Rushton Woods.
Rushton Woods.  Photo by Blake Goll.

During the two final MAPS mornings we did not have as many birds, but there were some notable visitors! One of which was our first Red-eyed Vireo, a breeding adult female judging by her brood patch.  A brood patch is basically a bare belly that results after the female plucks out all her belly feathers in order to better regulate the temperature of her eggs.

Red-eyed Vireo. Photo by Blake Goll.
Red-eyed Vireo. Photo by Blake Goll.

We hope this female vireo was only brooding her own young, but often these birds become unknowing hosts to the lazy Brown-headed Cowbird, a nest parasite who deposits her eggs in someone else’s nest to tend to rather than making her own nest.  The world may never know since our Red-eyed Vireo’s nest of twigs, bark strips, grasses, pine needles, and lichen was held together with spider web high up in the canopy of Rushton Woods where no one would ever lay eyes upon it.

Brown-headed Cowbird.  Photo from Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
Brown-headed Cowbird. Photo from Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

The final MAPS banding sessions were full of very cute babies, technically called juveniles, of many species including:

  • Common Yellowthroat
  • Gray Catbird
  • Wood Thrush
  • Veery
  • Northern Flicker
  • Tufted Titmouse
  • Carolina Chickadee
  • Eastern Towhee
  • American Robin
  • Carolina Wren
  • Downy Woodpecker
  • Northern Cardinal
  • Ovenbird
Second Year Woodthrush.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Second Year Woodthrush. Photo by Blake Goll.

Our top two most common babies were the Gray Catbird and Wood Thrush.  This is great because the Wood Thrush is a state responsibility species, meaning that Pennsylvania hosts a substantial percentage, about 8.5%, of the world’s breeding population of wood thrushes.  We can confidently say that Rushton is carrying its weight in the state’s stewardship of this ethereal and declining interior woodland nesting bird.  Read July’s e-bird news for more excellent information on the Wood Thrush, “The Symbol of Declining Forest Songbirds”.

Woodthrush on nest.  Photo by Adrian Binns.
Wood Thrush on nest. Photo by Adrian Binns.

The two biggest highlights of the summer were the Wood Thrush nesting right above our banding table in the woods (what a joy to share your work space with such a normally secretive bird and her growing family) and the famed Kentucky Warbler.  He was so handsome and rare to behold that once in the hand, it had the same googly-eyed, mouth-watering effect on the banders as a king size butterfinger has on a trick-or-treating kid on Halloween night!  Of course, instead of eating this bird we banded it and noted that it was a breeding male by the size of his cloacal protuberance.

Unfortunately, this young male could have merely been intending to breed but never found a female.  We heard him singing and claiming territory and saw his protuberance first-hand but still cannot confidently say that we have breeding Kentucky Warblers in Rushton Woods.  This is an improvement from last year though, when we only faintly heard one ‘KEWA’ singing at one point.  If we continue on this upward trend, maybe next year we will band a female with a brood patch and the year after that, a juvenile Kentucky Warbler, the best evidence of all that the understory of Rushton is healthy enough to support this skulking understory nester.

First Kentucky Warbler banded at Rushton (male).  Photo by Erika Arnold.
First Kentucky Warbler banded at Rushton (male). Photo by Erika Arnold.

As for our MAPS totals in comparison to last summer, we banded 103 new birds and had 72 recaptures this year.  Last year, our numbers were higher with 157 new birds and 87 recaptures.  We cannot say whether this is significant or try to find trends at this point.  “I would say that we completed another successful MAPS season with the highlight of KEWA (Kentucky Warbler).  Multiple data points are needed to describe trends, and we won’t have that for at least two more years.  We were disappointed by the number of birds caught this year, but we understand populations vary from year to year,” explained Doris McGovern, our federally licensed bird bander.

Now as for the cutest baby bird award of this summer, it’s a toss-up!  According to Natalie, it was the Carolina Chickadee. “He was quite adorable and came just in time for the Westtown students to witness his arrival! Chickadees are a fascinating species that challenge the expression, bird brain.   According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Black-capped Chickadees, which the Carolina Chickadee will breed with, allow brain neurons containing old information to die and replace them with new neurons. This act allows them to adapt to their changing environments and seasonal demands, despite the size of their brains,” Natalie found.  Upon further research, she was delighted to find out that, “although female Carolina chickadees will hiss if their nest is disturbed, in general chickadees are easily tamed and can be hand fed!”  I wonder what Natalie will be doing with her spare time now…Training chickadees?

Juvenile Carolina Chickadee.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Juvenile Carolina Chickadee before release. Photo by Blake Goll.

Natalie also really appreciated the Ovenbird’s cute factor.  “One of the most exciting moments in our last morning was when a baby Oven Bird flew into one of our nets!” , she exclaimed.  Oven birds are so called because of their nest that looks like a Dutch oven.  They are ground nesters and are often found hopping on the ground. “I am always struck by the distinctive dark speckles on the underside of the Oven Bird,” Natalie notes.

Juvenile ovenbird.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Juvenile ovenbird. Photo by Blake Goll.

In his meditative poem, “The Oven Bird”, Robert Frost draws our attention to the bird’s memorable song.   The sonnet turns as Frost links seasonal changes with the life cycle and asks, “What to make of a diminished thing”.

The Oven Bird

by Robert Frost

There is a singer everyone has heard,
Loud, a mid-summer and a mid-wood bird,
Who makes the solid tree trunks sound again.
He says that leaves are old and that for flowers
Mid-summer is to spring as one to ten.
He says the early petal-fall is past
When pear and cherry bloom went down in showers
On sunny days a moment overcast;
And comes that other fall we name the fall.
He says the highway dust is over all.
The bird would cease and be as other birds
But that he knows in singing not to sing.
The question that he frames in all but words
Is what to make of a diminished thing.

Click here to read an enlightening All About Birds article from Cornell that echoes Robert Frost’s sense of loss over the lively spring bird chorus and highlights the reasons behind the irony of birds actually being more abundant this time of year than in spring, even though the woods seem so quiet now.

Baby Tufted Titmouse.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Baby Tufted Titmouse. Photo by Blake Goll.

The Ovenbirds might be enchanting and their babies cute, but the baby that won my heart this summer was the plain Tufted Titmouse.  There was something so endearing about the little tufts of feathers sticking out from his head in random places and his little bill that seemed like somebody shrunk it!

Baby Tufted Titmouse.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Baby Tufted Titmouse. Photo by Blake Goll.  Notice his new flight feathers coming in, fleshy “bird lips” and wispy body feathers (juvenal characteristics).

Which baby bird from this summer is your favorite?

Juvenile male Northern Flicker.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Juvenile male Northern Flicker. Photo by Blake Goll.
Juvenile female Northern Cardinal
Juvenile female Northern Cardinal
Adult Veery.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Adult Veery. Photo by Blake Goll.
Juvenile Carolina Wren.
Juvenile Carolina Wren.

Remember from a previous blog post that although it’s fun holding young birds in the hand, MAPS is rigorous science and the best thing a banding station can do for bird conservation. We do this because our data, in addition to data from about 500 MAPS stations sprinkled across the U.S., is crucial to understanding changes in bird populations.  Banding birds creates individuals, which allows us to understand whole populations and see trends.  Keeping track of these bird populations is the only way to detect significant declines and to ultimately guide land management decisions to the benefit of birds using sound scientific data.  When we band young birds, we take care to walk them back to where they were caught to release them in the vicinity of their parents’ care.

Late Summer Nesters

Recently, the Rushton farm staff discovered a bird’s nest on the ground by the greenhouse. Looking at the eggs, we decided it is most likely a Carolina Wren’s nest. The dark rust-colored speckles, a characteristic of Carolina Wrens’ eggs, are particularly striking.  A pair of Carolina Wrens will often build several nests together before deciding upon one.  It’s a joint effort with one wren staying by the nest while the other forages for materials.  Nests around homes have been reported to be found in boots, mailboxes and old coat pockets!  The nest we found could very well be this pair’s third brood of the season.

Carolina Wren eggs next to Greenhouse.  Photo by Natalie Staples.
Carolina Wren eggs next to Greenhouse. Photo by Natalie Staples.

While harvesting last week, the farm staff were surprised to find another late nest among the Striped German tomatoes. They believe it is the nest of a Song Sparrow. It is very well hidden in one of the thicker patches of tomato vines.  These nests are exciting, tangible examples of the success of the mutually beneficial relationship between sustainable agriculture and the local bird population.

Song Sparrow nestlings in tomato plant.  Photo by Fred de Long.
Song Sparrow nestlings in tomato plant. Photo by Fred de Long.

For Fun

  • Participate in GO WILMA (Get Outside Willistown and Malvern), a local outdoor adventure/summer reading program for K-5th graders and their families.  Children receive Captain’s Logs from Malvern or Paoli libraries and then use the clues to search for stars hidden in special places this summer, including our own Rushton and Kirkwood Preserves.  Go to willistownparks.org to find out more and take advantage of this fun program before it ends August 24th!

  • Read “Cerulean Blues: A Personal Search for a Vanishing Songbird” by Katie Fallon.  This is a new book on birders’ radars that wonderfully documents the 2000 mile journey of the elusive Cerulean warbler, the fastest declining warbler species in the U.S., from Appalachia to a coffee plantation in Colombia.

  • Check out Thomas Poulsom’s quest to have LEGO bird kits available for sale, and support the idea with your vote!  Click here to read an article about it.   There you will find links to Tom’s flickr page where you can browse all of his LEGO creations. They are amazing and quite elegant and feature birds in their specific habitats, allowing kids to learn about birds as they build.  It’s enough to turn even adult birders into “LEGO maniacs”!

Enjoy the waning days of summer and look forward to the warblers to come,

~Blake Goll (and Natalie Staples)

I leave you with the poem expertly selected by Cathy and Natalie Staples as inspiration for our Young Birders during the poetry workshop:

The Lake Isle of Innisfree
by W.B. Yeats
I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made:
Nine bean-rows will I have there, a hive for the honey-bee;
And live alone in the bee-loud glade.
And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,
Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;
There midnight’s all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,
And evening full of the linnet’s wings.
I will arise and go now, for always night and day
I hear the lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey,
I hear it in the deep heart’s core.

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events, Owls Tagged With: Bird banding, fall migration, Hawk Mountain, kids poetry, MAPS, PA Young Birders, Red knot

Spring Migration Banding Is Done, Summer MAPS has Begun!

June 15, 2012 By Communications Team

Prairie Warbler. Photo by Shawn Collins, an avid PA birder and photographer! Check out his flickr site:  <http://www.flickr.com/photos/pghdjshawn/>
Prairie Warbler. Photo by Shawn Collins, an avid PA birder and photographer! Check out his flickr site for his impressive photostream: <http://www.flickr.com/photos/pghdjshawn/>

NOTE to SUBSCRIBERS:  For best viewing results of this blog, please click on the post title to view in your browser rather than email format.  (There are many pictures to load).

We officially closed the spring migration banding station on May 24th, after the steady stream of migrants abruptly dried up.  The total count for that day was a whopping 4 birds, including Gray Catbirds and one Indigo Bunting. The few days leading up to that final day were painfully slow as well, with our biggest day yielding just barely a baker’s dozen of birds.  We knew it was time to pull the plug, though it’s always bittersweet to say goodbye to such a sensational season of over 300 winged wonders.

Barn swallow by Tim Zador
Barn swallow at Rushton. Photo by Tim Zador.
Ruby throated hummer by Brianna Brigham
Male Ruby-throated Hummingbird (the only one in our nets this spring). Photo by Brianna Brigham.

We noticed that we banded a few more species of migrant birds last spring than this spring; absentees from this year’s catch that were present last year include Worm-eating Warbler, Blue-winged Warbler, and Prairie Warbler.  However, we did hear individuals of these species singing on occasion this spring, so it may have  just been that we were lucky to get them in our nets last year (and unlucky this year).  On the other hand, they may not have been as abundant at Rushton this spring as compared to last.  We really can’t say much until we have long term banding records over many years.  Of note, we did gain a species never before banded at Rushton, the Yellow Warbler!

Aging Yellow Warbler by tail edging (This is an After Second Year bird).  Photo by Blake Goll.
Ageing Yellow Warbler by tail edging (This is an After Second Year bird). Photo by Blake Goll.

A couple of days before close, we managed to scrounge up a nice assortment of birds for our last school group of the year, the Westtown first graders.   The catch included a captivating Canada Warbler, several secretive Northern Waterthrush, a rambunctious Red bellied Woodpecker,  a sweet Ovenbird, flamboyant Common Yellowthroats, and the first fledgling of the year, a Carolina Wren!  With eyes as big as saucers, each child gazed in wordless awe upon the wild bird gently placed in their hands, as if seeing for the first time a woodland nymph they had only seen in fairytales!  If each child walks away with that magical memory and the belief in the healing power and beauty of nature, then we consider it a success for the future of habitat conservation.

Westtown 1st grader holding Carolina Wren
Westtown 1st grader holding Carolina Wren.  Photo by Blake Goll
Canada Warbler.  Photo by Blake Goll
Canada Warbler. Photo by Blake Goll
Doris McGovern, federally licensed bird bander, explaining banding process to Westtown 1st grade.
Doris McGovern, federally licensed bird bander, explaining banding process to Westtown 1st grade.  Photo by Blake Goll
Westtown 1st graders holding Ovenbird before release.  Photo by Blake Goll
Westtown 1st graders holding Ovenbird before release. Photo by Blake Goll

Our bird banding station not only contributes to global bird conservation (all of our data goes to the USGS where everyone else’s banding data is maintained) and helps us document Rushton’s bird populations, but it also serves as a means to connect people to nature through intimate experiences with birds.  We strive to reach as many audiences as we can, young and old, black and white, urban and suburban, with this incredible experience and conservation message.

A banded Eastern Bluebird baby.  Photo by Gloria Ives
A banded Eastern Bluebird baby. Photo by Gloria Ives

In my daily web wanderings, I came across this enlightening, entertaining, and wonderfully written article, “Black Birder in the Black Swamp”, by J. Drew Lanham.  A birder of color himself, he writes about his birding (and people-ing) experience at Black Swamp Bird Observatory in Ohio for “The Biggest Week in American Birding”, an annual May event at one of the hottest birding meccas in the country where warblers are said to “drip from the trees” during migration.  Lanham makes you feel like you’re right there alongside him with binoculars and makes a great case for the need to include a wider diversity of faces in the world of birding (and ultimately conservation). I strongly encourage you to check it out on his blog ” Wild and in Color”.

Adrian Binns showing nest to PA Young Birders.  Photo by Gloria Ives
Adrian Binns showing Tree Swallow nest to PA Young Birders. Photo by Gloria Ives

Also in that article is a reference to our  “always affable Adrian Binns of Wildside Nature Tours“, who was also there for the “Biggest Day in American Birding” in Ohio.   Back at Rushton Woods Preserve this past Saturday, June 9th, he charismatically lead the first annual PA Young Birders (PAYB) “Kids Get Out and Bird” program which was a huge success and a ton of fun.  Twenty Young Birders, many of which were brand new faces to Rushton, excitedly trekked around the farm and woods searching for as many different types of bird nests as they could find.  We investigated every nestbox and every nest for structural composition, eggs, nestlings, and species clues. They took turns recording the information, opening nestboxes (always thrilling!), and holding the baby birds (which is harmless by the way-the adults will NOT abandon their babies just because someone touched them).  We found and identified over a dozen different nests of species including House Wren, Chickadee, Barn Swallow, Tree Swallow, Eastern Bluebird, Northern Mockingbird, Wood Thrush, and Downy Woodpecker.  The children even got to participate in the banding of 4 of the farm’s bluebird babies!  Check out Adrian’s summary and pictures on his blog, “Notes from the Wildside“.

Blake Goll instructing Young Birders to always politely knock before opening a nestbox!  Photo by Adrian Binns.
Blake Goll instructing Young Birders to always politely knock before opening a nestbox! Photo by Adrian Binns.
Bluebird nest.  Photo by Gloria Ives
Bluebird nest (with Blue Jay feather). Photo by Gloria Ives
Tree swallow eggs.  Photo by Gloria Ives.
Tree Swallow eggs. Photo by Gloria Ives.
PA Young Birder observing baby Tree Swallow and fecal sac (or birdie diaper!).  Photo by Gloria Ives
PA Young Birder observing baby Tree Swallow and fecal sac (or birdie diaper!). Photo by Gloria Ives
Eastern Bluebird baby getting banded.  Photo by Gloria Ives
Eastern Bluebird baby getting banded. Photo by Gloria Ives
Young Birder taking nest data.  Photo by Gloria Ives
Young Birder taking nest data. Photo by Gloria Ives
Young Birders and their drawings of bird nests.  Photo by Adrian Binns.
Young Birders and their drawings of bird nests. Photo by Adrian Binns.

Now that migration is over until the fall, we are now banding breeding birds (and their young) in the woods of Rushton for MAPS, which stands for Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship.   This is the most important, data intensive project that a banding station can do.  The program was started in 1989 by the Institute for Bird Populations (IBP) in Point Reyes, CA, and there are now just 500 certified, constant-effort MAPS stations in North America, including Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm (RUFA)!  This will be our second summer of official MAPS station operation, and IBP requires a minimum 5 year commitment.

Rushton Woods.  Photo by Blake Goll
Rushton Woods. Photo by Blake Goll

Unlike migration banding during which we try to get out as many days a week as we can,  MAPS requires that we band for 6 hours once every 10 days during the breeding season, following strict IBP protocol that ensures that our data can be easily compared to continent-wide data.  This involved clearing and setting up 10 new strategic net lanes throughout the preserve last summer, with each net a certain distance apart from the others within an 8 hectare total area.  Then we completed a rigorous Habitat Survey Analysis of all the habitat types, plant species, and botanical structural composition of our study area.

Our resulting data will contribute to critical information on the ecology, conservation, and management of North American landbird populations, and the factors responsible for changes in their populations.  Check out the IBP website to learn more about MAPS and the other important projects underway as well as their training programs.  There, you will also find interesting bird banding resources and publications, including the MAPS annual report.

Bird bands.  Photo by Gloria Ives
Bird bands. Photo by Gloria Ives

MAPS BANDING IS NOT OPEN TO THE PUBLIC.  But don’t worry…  I’ll keep you in the loop, and public fall banding will be here before you know it!

Unfortunately,we cannot accept visitors or any more volunteers (who do NOT have MAPS training) to our MAPS banding station at this time.  Part of the reason why we only band once every 10 days during MAPS is to minimize disturbance to these breeding birds during an energetically expensive time in their lives.  Many visitors and volunteers may cause too much disturbance to the birds and also to the banders who must focus their energy on rigorous data recording.  If you are interested in getting involved with MAPS, I would encourage you to attend one of IBP’s training courses or complete a MAPS internship.

After Second Year Red-bellied Woodpecker
After Second Year Red-bellied Woodpecker.  Photo by Blake Goll

Our first MAPS session for this year was the first week of June.  It was pretty slow with only 19 total birds banded (as compared to 32 in that period last year). The pace picked up this week with a total of 26 breeding birds banded including:

  • Northern Cardinals
  • Ovenbirds
  • Red-bellied Woodpecker
  • Common Yellowthroats
  • Downy Woodpecker
  • Veery
  • Wood Thrushes
  • Gray Catbirds
  • Blue Jay
Common Yellowthroat (an older female)
Common Yellowthroat (an older female). Photo by Blake Goll
Ovenbird.  Photo by Blake Goll
Ovenbird. Photo by Blake Goll
Veery.  Photo by Blake Goll
Veery. Photo by Blake Goll

The Downy Woodpecker was our favorite. She just had so much character, and the endearing berry mustache around her beak told us she had just been dining in a delicious patch of wild raspberries.  YUMMY.

Female Downy Woodpecker - with berry mustache!  Photo by Blake Goll.
Female Downy Woodpecker – with berry mustache! Photo by Blake Goll.

Some birds breeding in the woods of Rushton are continually evading our nets, but we know they are present by their songs.  The Scarlet Tanager is one such breeder, who spends most of his time high up in the canopy feeding on insects, spiders, buds and fruit.  The Kentucky Warbler, whose cheery song was absent from Rushton last summer, is back this year!  This handsome masked denizen of the dense, deciduous understory is bound to land in one of our nets at some point this summer…We hope.  It would be a notable first for RUFA.

Scarlet Tanager by Brent Bacon
Scarlet Tanager. Photo by Brent Bacon. Check out his photos of Barn Owl Banding and more on Seven Mountains Audubon blog.

Well, I’m on vacation to Florida next week (I wonder what birds I’ll see there), but our long-time intern, Natalie Staples, will be guest blogging!  She is the talented daughter of Cathy Staples, a  Villanova poetry professor and published award-winning poet.  Natalie is following in her mother’s footsteps and studying literature abroad in England next year! I know you’ll enjoy her blog presence.

In the mean time, I’ll leave you with;

A Couple of Books to Enjoy,

  • Birding for Everyone: Encouraging People of Color to Become Birdwatchers by John C. Robinson
  • The Bluebird Effect:  Uncommon Bonds with Common Birds by Julie Zickefoose

A Couple of Bird ID Resources to Discover,

  • NatureInstruct by USGS
  • Inside Birding Series- You Tube by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology

And A Few Fun Things to Do!

  • Join thousands of families for The Great American Backyard Campout on June 23rd for the National Wildlife Federation.
  • Submit your photos, videos, stories or artwork of a “funky nest in a funky place” for the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Funky Nest 2012 competition.
  • Participate in GO WILMA, a local outdoor adventure/summer reading program for K-5th graders and their families.  Children receive Captain’s Logs from Malvern or Paoli libraries and then use the clues to search for stars hidden in special places this summer, including our own Rushton and Kirkwood Preserves.  Go to willistownparks.org to find out more and get started!

May your summer be filled with new birds and new beginnings,

~Blake

Blake Goll with Tree swallow nestling.  Photo by Gloria Ives
Blake Goll with Tree swallow nestling. Photo by Gloria Ives

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events Tagged With: Baby bird, Bird banding, Eastern bluebird, IBP, MAPS, Nests, PA Young Birders, Tree Swallow

Last Day of Spring Migration Banding Tomorrow

May 23, 2012 By Communications Team

Come visit the Rushton banding station and see the birds tomorrow morning if you haven’t already!  We will be banding from 6am until 10am.

Remember: the earlier the birdier!

Rusty undertail coverts of Catbird
“Catbird waving good-bye”. (Rusty undertail coverts of Gray Catbird). Photo by Blake Goll.

Bye- Bye migrants!  Until next season…

~Blake

P.S.  Stay tuned for the season wrap-up!

Filed Under: Bird Banding Tagged With: Bird banding, Gray Catbird, Rushton

Warblers, Thrushes, and Orioles, Oh My!

May 4, 2012 By Communications Team

 

Black and white warbler.  By Brianna Brigham
Black and White Warbler. Photo by Brianna Brigham

We were rained out of the banding station every day this week until Thursday, but it was worth the wait.  The past two mornings were chilly, foggy and gray, but the nets were hot, the woods and fields were alive with song, and the catch was colorful!

Here’s a quick  list of highlights and new (for the year) species banded this week:

  • 34 birds banded on Thursday, including 8 recaptures
  • 51 birds banded today, including 6 recaptures
  • Veery
  • Wood Thrush
  • Ovenbird
  • Indigo Bunting
  • Baltimore Oriole
  • Magnolia Warbler
  • Black and White Warbler
  • Common Yellowthroat
  • Chestnut-Sided Warbler
  • Black-throated Blue Warbler
  • Swamp Sparrow
  • Ruby-throated Hummingbird (not banded)
  • Willow Flycatcher
  • One net was closed for the season (to be relocated next week) because of proximity to an active fox den !
  • We placed 3 more bluebird boxes at Rushton!
  • We heard Scarlet Tanagers, Blackpoll Warbler, Black-throated Green Warbler and American Redstarts (all of which evaded the nets)
Male Chestnut sided warbler. Photo by Blake Goll
Male Chestnut sided warbler. Photo by Blake Goll
Second Year Male Common Yellowthroat.  Photo by Blake Goll
Second Year Male Common Yellowthroat. Photo by Blake Goll
Indigo bunting.  Photo by Blake Goll
Indigo bunting. Photo by Blake Goll
Young (both Second Year) Veery wing comparison.  Photo by Blake Goll
Young (both Second Year) Veery wing comparison. Photo by Blake Goll
Wood Thrush.  Photo by Blake Goll
Wood Thrush. Photo by Blake Goll
Willow Flycatcher.  Photo by Blake Goll
Willow Flycatcher. Photo by Blake Goll

Hope to see you at Rushton next week!  We will band as usual on Tuesday and Thursday morning, sunrise until 11am,  unless it rains.

~Blake

7th grader with Magnolia Warbler.  Photo by Blake Goll
7th grader with Magnolia Warbler. Photo by Blake Goll

 

Filed Under: Bird Banding Tagged With: Bird banding, Rushton Woods Preserve, warblers, Willistown Conservation Trust, wood thrush

The Tide of Tweeters is Coming In

April 27, 2012 By Communications Team

Brown Thrasher Spring 2012. Photo by Justin Thompson
Brown Thrasher, April 2012. Photo by Justin Thompson

The vernal clock is ticking, the fervent winds from the South are rising, and I can almost hear the steady beating of the wings  as the migrant wave swells steadily northward.  The birds that have already arrived or passed through seem to be twittering, “The tide is coming, the tide is coming!”, as they hurriedly move on or get right down to reserving the best territories before the crowd comes.

The crowd is indeed coming! Birders have been reporting that migration is “raging” in the south, and birds in the east that have been bottled up by the recent storms just moved north in massive numbers in the last couple of nights.  Although it is still a bit early for neo-tropical migrants here, we can expect to see increasing numbers of warblers, vireos, tanagers, orioles and grosbeaks.

Adult White-eyed Vireo. Spring 2012.  Photo by Blake Goll
Adult White-eyed Vireo. April 2012. Photo by Blake Goll

Check out this radar image of migration movement south of us last night.  The circles of blue indicate migrating birds, while the irregular patterns are storms.  Pretty cool, huh?  Radar images are being used more regularly in ornithology and birding to help predict bird migration and link bird movements to weather patterns.

Radar image of migrating birds.
Radar image of night migrating birds.

We are expecting the banding station to start getting very busy!  We have been open for “birdness” (as Lisa Kiziuk, Director of the WCT Bird Conservation Program, puts it) for the past three weeks, and things have been pretty quiet with only half a dozen birds on some days.  However, we have had good quality  to make up for the lack of quantity: a migrant flock of American Robins, several Brown Thrashers, nice little  flocks of White-throated Sparrows, a couple Winter Wrens, Hermit Thrush, a White-eyed Vireo, and a red phase Eastern Screech Owl!  A pair of  Brown Thrashers are nesting at Rushton Woods Preserve, so we get to listen to the male’s lovely song every morning.

Second Year American Robin with obvious retained juvenile (brownish) feathers.  Notice the molt limit in the secondary flight feathers.
Second Year American Robin with obvious retained juvenile (brownish) feathers. Notice what we call a molt limit in the secondary flight feathers (the brownish ragged feathers contrasting with the pearly gray adult feathers).

Last week, we captured a recap Common Yellowthroat ; we had banded him in a previous year, so he has returned safely to his summer home!  This week, Gray Catbirds arrived, including one of ours that we banded at Rushton last year.  Welcome home!  I’m never more excited to see a catbird than I am for the first catbird of the year.  They become so common so fast, our “bread and butter bird”, but for now the Catbird  elicits smiles from ear to ear as if he were a good friend of ours that had been out of touch for years.  His beautiful song now fills the woods and our yards with tropical euphony.

Our first Gray Catbird of the year!  Picture by Blake Goll.
Our first Gray Catbird of the year! Picture by Blake Goll.

Those tiny denizens of the leaves, the wood warblers, should be arriving now that their tree havens have sprung to life.  I can’t wait!

Black-throated Green Warblers by Louis Agassiz Fuertes
Black-throated Green Warblers by Louis Agassiz Fuertes

Don’t forget about our Warbler Walk at Kirkwood Preserve next Sunday May 6 from 7:30am -10am, led by our federally licensed bird bander and master birder, Doris McGovern!  We will meet in the Kirkwood parking lot on Grubbs Mill Road.  Please RSVP to me, Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org), by May 3.

Also be sure to visit the banding station at Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm as migration picks up.  We are open to the public Tuesday and Thursday mornings from sunrise (5:30am) until about 11am (unless it rains).  No need to RSVP unless you plan to bring a large group.  We band to contribute to global bird conservation efforts, to document the bird populations and species diversity using the preserve, and to connect people to nature through intimate experiences with birds.

Wyoming visitor with White-throated sparrow
Wyoming visitor with White-throated sparrow.

PA Young Birders Update

The PA Young Birders had a blast birding and “migrating” this past Saturday at Rushton.  The children had a chance to hold the newly hatched and very naked Carolina Wren nestlings, which we borrowed from the funky weed wacker nest.  What was Mama Wren thinking? Needless to say, our farm staff will be short one weed wacker this season!  What a perfect picture of farm and nature existing in harmony.

Carolina Wren in weed wacker nest.
Carolina Wren in weed wacker nest at Rushton Farm. Photo by Blake Goll
Carolina Wren eggs in weed wacker nest.
Carolina Wren eggs in weed wacker nest. Photo by Blake Goll
Carolina Wren babies (weed wacker-2012)
Carolina Wren babies (weed wacker-2012). Photo by Blake Goll
Carolina Wren nestling in Young Birder's hands. Photo by Blake Goll
Carolina Wren nestling in PA Young Birder's hands. Photo by Blake Goll

The Young Birders also got their exercise racing against each other in an obstacle course that simulated bird migration and the many (often human imposed) hazards birds must face.  These hazards included having to find food and water while avoiding being eaten by cats and other predators, weaving in and out of buildings in a city, avoiding glass windows,  flying over habitat destruction and around windmills, and dodging cars!  (No children were injured in this simulation).

Migration simulation obstacle course
Migration simulation obstacle course

The next PAYB meeting, “Spring Migration Morning at the Rushton Woods Preserve Banding Station” will be held Saturday May 19, 9am-11am.  The children will experience songbirds in the hand and science in the field during the peak of spring migration at Rushton.  We offer this unforgettable memory to children for free, but a donation of $5 per child is suggested to help us maintain our  special outdoor classroom and quality educational programs.  Please RSVP to me, Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org).

Westtown 1st grader holding Canada Warbler.  Photo by Blake Goll
Westtown 1st grader holding Canada Warbler, May 2011. Photo by Blake Goll

Also coming up is the Pretty Big Bird Day , May 12 from as early as you wish until 6pm.  Click here for more information about the event.  This event is a friendly competition between teams to see who can spot the most species in the Willistown area.  Families and birders of all ages are welcome!  Form your own team or join an existing one by contacting Dick Eales at REales@gmail.com.  Any interested PA Young Birders  should contact me, Blake Goll  (bhg@wctrust.org),  by May 8th to join my team for a couple hours of the competition!

Early Spring Babies

Here is a picture of the happy bluebird babies in my own backyard.  They all hatched successfully before the egg- pecking House Wren returned, and they are just 4 or 5 days from fledging!  Unfortunately, the bluebird family at Rushton was not so lucky.   They nested much later than mine, and  their eggs were pecked this week by the aggressive House Wren.  Hopefully, once the wren gets busy with his own nest, the bluebirds will have a chance.  We also plan to place three more bluebird boxes at Rushton in a more open area of the fields, far away from the hedgerow.  Bluebird boxes that are too close to hedges or the edge of woods are at high risk for wren predation.

Bluebird nestlings.  Photo by Blake Goll
Bluebird nestlings. Photo by Blake Goll

The skies are alive at Rushton with the theatrical dynamics of the Tree Swallows, which are starting their nests.  Fred De Long, Director of the Farm, remembers when there was only one lone pair of swallows 3 years ago when the farm was just starting out.  This year, there are several pairs; like the orioles, the swallows seem to be flourishing with the maturation of the sustainable farm nestled in the nature preserve.

Tree Swallow relaxing on top of his new home.  Photo by Fred de Long
Tree Swallow relaxing on top of his new home. (April 2012). Photo by Fred de Long

Lisa Kiziuk has a family of House Finches that nested in her wreath at her home.  The babies have already fledged and the TAP students ( The Achievement Project of Chester), who have been learning about the farm and birds, were thrilled to have a chance to cradle the charming nestlings in their hands last week.  House finches were once sold as pets and called Hollywood Finches; their sweet and amusing dispositions coupled with their beautiful song make it easy to see why they were desirable pets!

TAP student with House Finch baby.  Photo by Blake Goll
TAP student with House Finch baby. Photo by Blake Goll
Lisa's House finch.
Lisa's House finch nestling. Photo by Blake Goll.

Happy Belated Birthday to John James Audubon!

Born on April 26, 1785, he is one of the most celebrated  French-American ornithologists, naturalists, and painters.  His seminal work, “The Birds of North America,” is considered the finest ornithological work ever completed and can be viewed online here.  This online version is definitely not as fabulous as the real thing (which is a wonderful coffee table book!), but fun to browse nonetheless.

Audubon Whip-Poor-Will
Audubon Whippoorwill from "The Birds of North America"

Excuse me, but I must go plant a tree for the birds…

Happy Arbor Day!

~Blake

Sunshine through a Dogwood Tree (http://mseagtaann.deviantart.com)
Sunshine through a Dogwood Tree (http://mseagtaann.deviantart.com)

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events Tagged With: Bird banding, birding, Brown Thrasher, Carolina Wren, migration, PA Young Birders, TAP, White eyed Vireo

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